Elliot Colburn (Carshalton and Wallington) (Con) I beg to move,
That this House has considered e-petition 619442, relating to the
Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill. It is a pleasure to serve under
your chairmanship, Mr Hollobone. The prayer of the petition states:
“Hundreds of thousands of people signed numerous petitions calling
for actions that the Government has included in the Kept Animals
Bill. The Government should urgently find time to allow the
Bill...Request free trial
(Carshalton and Wallington)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered e-petition 619442, relating to the
Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Hollobone.
The prayer of the petition states:
“Hundreds of thousands of people signed numerous petitions
calling for actions that the Government has included in the Kept
Animals Bill. The Government should urgently find time to allow
the Bill to complete its journey through Parliament and become
law.
The Government promised to find time to take this bill through
the next parliamentary stages so it can receive Royal Assent and
become law, yet we are still waiting. For the Government to live
up to its claims to be leading the way in animal welfare there
must be no further delay to this legislation becoming law.”
The petition received over 107,000 signatures, which include
nearly 100 from my Carshalton and Wallington constituency. I
thank the petition creator, Jordan, whom I had the pleasure of
meeting last week. We have met on a number of occasions as he is
responsible for a number of the animal welfare petitions that we
have debated in this place. I also thank the Petitions Committee
staff for their excellent work in engaging with the public and
petitioners in advance of today’s debate as well as the range of
animal welfare charities and organisations that briefed me, and I
am sure many other Members, before the debate.
The petition is one of many on animal welfare that the Petitions
Committee has considered in recent years. The Animal Welfare
(Kept Animals) Bill brings together many of those topics under
one umbrella, and I, and I am sure many other colleagues,
consider it an extremely important piece of legislation. I have
bored colleagues in the House many times before by discussing
what I think one could call my menagerie of animals, so the issue
is very close to my heart.
Let me bring Members up to speed. The Bill was introduced in the
House of Commons in June 2021. It received Second Reading in
October 2021, and went through Committee in November ’21. It did
not make any further progress in the 2021-22 Session, and was
carried over and reintroduced in May ’22. The Bill is awaiting
Report stage. Both in their reply to the petition and many times
in the House the Government have stated that they intend to
continue the Bill’s passage through the Commons when
parliamentary time allows.
In November ’22, when the Petitions Committee decided to schedule
the debate, we wrote to the Environment Secretary for
confirmation of when the Government plan to allocate further time
for the Bill, to inform the Committee’s decision about whether to
schedule a debate. I do not believe that we have had a response,
but the Minister will correct me if I am wrong. I am grateful
that the Minister is here to update us on the Bill’s
progress.
The Bill is so important because, in a single legislative step,
it addresses several commitments that the Conservative party made
in our 2019 manifesto.
(Chatham and Aylesford)
(Con)
Like my hon. Friend, I thank the Petitions Committee and the
petitioners for introducing this important debate. Many of our
constituents will have signed the petition, and from the number
of colleagues in the Chamber today, I hope that the Minister can
see that his Back Benchers are committed to the Bill going
through. Given that the action plan for animal welfare, published
in May 2021, was wildly praised by the whole sector, does my hon.
Friend agree that it is disappointing that there has been such
stagnation from this Government? Will he, like me, urge the
Government to bring it forward as soon as possible?
I am grateful for the intervention of my hon. Friend, who has
been a doughty champion of animal welfare issues in this place
over many years. I agree: it is disappointing that the Bill has
not made it into law, and I hope that we send the message that we
are keen to see it progress.
The overarching animal welfare issues addressed in the Bill
include, but are not limited to, the end of export of live
animals for fattening and slaughter, cracking down on puppy
smuggling, updating the Zoo Licensing Act 1981, banning the
keeping of primates as pets, introducing a new offence of pet
abduction following the work of the pet theft taskforce and
reforming legislation to tackle livestock worrying.
(Ynys Môn) (Con)
This is a really important debate, and I am glad my hon. Friend
has secured it. The Bill has great significance to my Ynys Môn
constituents, and I have received many letters urging the UK
Government to bring it into law. I fully support the Bill,
especially its goals of banning live exports and cracking down on
puppy smuggling, which my hon. Friend mentioned. I am
particularly keen to support the many farmers across the UK who
are impacted by livestock worrying; indeed, I introduced a
ten-minute rule Bill to amend and upgrade the Dangerous Dogs Act
1991. I think this important Bill should progress through
Parliament as soon as possible, and I hope the Minister will
refer to livestock worrying in his answer.
My hon. Friend makes a really important point on behalf of her
Ynys Môn constituents. I want to touch very briefly on each of
these overarching areas.
(North Thanet) (Con)
Mr Hollobone, I have explained to you that unfortunately, I have
to leave early; I wish I did not have to. Before my hon. Friend
moves on, a few moments ago he said “including, but not
exclusively”. On behalf of the Conservative Animal Welfare
Foundation, which wholeheartedly supports the legislation, may I
make it absolutely plain on the record that we do not see the
Bill as a Christmas tree? There is no question of Conservative
Members trying to amend it to include things that the Government
do not want, so if that is a block to the Bill, it no longer
needs to be.
I am very grateful to my right hon. Friend for his intervention.
I hope that the Minister has heard that representation loud and
clear: if that is a block, I hope my right hon. Friend’s remarks
have made clear that it should not be.
First, let me delve into live animal exports in a bit more
detail. Live animals are exported to EU countries from the UK for
breeding, fattening and slaughter. The concern from many is that
during that process, animals undergo dehydration, starving and
exhaustion and often end up as the victims of very cruel actions
that are already illegal in the UK. Our departure from the
European Union makes it possible to ban live animal exports. I am
aware that there are mixed feelings about the proposals in the
farming community, and I am sure that that has added to the
delay. Concerns about the impacts that the ban could have on
trade and business are, of course, valid, but I hope the Minister
will be able to share some of the work his Department has done to
address those concerns, and some of the mitigation measures that
could be introduced to ensure we improve animal welfare while
protecting businesses.
(Knowsley) (Lab)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing the debate. I am
sure that he, like me and many other Members, will have had
representations from his constituents on the specific issue of
the export of animals for slaughter. Does he agree that the
strength of feeling on the issue is such that it needs to be
dealt with as a matter of some urgency?
I absolutely agree with the right hon. Gentleman. I have
certainly had that correspondence, and I am sure many colleagues
will speak about the level of correspondence they have received
from their constituents who feel so passionately that live animal
exports are a cruel practice that should not be taking place.
Next, I want to move on to puppy smuggling. We have had debates
in the Chamber about that topic and, as many colleagues will be
aware, campaigners have been calling to an end to puppy smuggling
and other dubious practices for many years. It has been debated,
Ministers have answered parliamentary questions, there has been a
major Committee inquiry and multiple drop-in events and campaign
emails have been organised on the subject.
(Edinburgh West) (LD)
I congratulate the hon. Member on securing the debate, because,
as he has said, the subject has evoked an enormous response in my
constituency. One of the main issues is puppy smuggling. I have
visited the Dogs Trust in West Lothian, and, over the period of
the pandemic, the number of puppies they had to take into care
escalated beyond belief. Some 2,000 smuggled dogs have been taken
into care in the past two years, and the cost of living crisis is
making the situation even worse. Does the hon. Member agree that
delays to the Bill are helping criminals by keeping the puppy
smuggling trade alive through a lack of legislation?
I join the hon. Member in commending the Dogs Trust and many
other animal welfare charities on their amazing work. I agree
with her concerns about what delay means for those animals.
On puppy smuggling, more than 66,000 dogs were commercially
imported into the UK in 2020 alone, according to Animal and Plant
Health Agency figures. Evidence also shows a recent rise in
low-welfare imports and smuggling activity, with border
authorities seeing a 260% or so increase in the number of young
puppies being intercepted for not meeting the UK’s import
rules—from 324 in 2019 to 843 in 2020. There was a further 11%
increase in commercially imported dogs from 2020 to 2021.
Research has discovered that a shocking 38% of people said that
they would buy a dog smuggled from another country. People are
more willing to support that trade than we might think. Illegal
puppy trafficking is not only a concern for the welfare of
animals, which are usually treated appallingly, but it is also a
concern for the safety of our constituents. I am sure I am not
the only Member who has received multiple representations from
constituents about dog theft. Puppy smuggling and organised crime
have been proven to go hand in hand and an investigation in 2017
discovered that an illicit puppy smuggling market operated in
parallel to legal trade.
I am grateful that the Government have consulted on ending puppy
smuggling, as well as pledging to introduce a new pet abduction
offence following the work of the pet theft taskforce, which is
included within the scope of the Bill. The section of the Bill
dealing with the importation of dogs, cats and ferrets has two
main parts. The first limits the number of these animals that can
be moved on a non-commercial basis. The second sets restrictions
on the condition of animals that can be brought into the country.
Those proposals have been on the cards for some time with
cross-party support, so I hope we can move forward with the Bill
to tackle the scourge of puppy smuggling as soon as possible.
On zoos, the Bill states that the Zoo Licensing Act 1981 will be
amended to improve zoo regulations and ensure that zoos are doing
more to contribute toward conservation. That includes removing
the exemption under the definition of zoos that means wild
animals exhibited in circuses do not need to be licensed. It
comes in addition to provisions in the Wild Animals in Circuses
Act 2019 and similar legislation in devolved Administrations. The
provisions would mean that no vertebrate animal not normally
domesticated in Great Britain could be used in travelling
circuses.
The Bill also amends the 1981 Act to allow the Secretary of State
to specify standards for conservation for zoos and removes
existing standards. It allows different conservation standards to
be set for different types of zoos and would make it a licence
condition for those standards to be met. It allows those with
specialist expertise in certain species of animal that are kept
in a zoo to be added to the list of possible inspectors for zoos,
setting out that they could be used for periodic zoo inspections.
It also amends provisions for appeals and the level of fines for
offences.
I want to talk specifically about primates. The Animal Welfare
Act 2006 makes it a crime to cause any unnecessary suffering to
kept animals. However, primates are highly intelligent animals
with complex needs and require specialist care. It is not enough
to legislate against suffering to kept animals when so many kept
primates in the UK are kept in horrific conditions because of
their special needs. The primate trade, though little talked
about, is out of control according to Monkey World, who are
inundated with requests to rescue primates who have been
neglected by people who cannot manage them. Fully banning the
trade of primates in the UK for personal pets is long overdue,
and animal rights campaigners across the world are applauding the
Government for taking steps to achieve that.
The final issue I want to touch on is livestock worrying. Results
from the latest National Sheep Association survey found that on
average each respondent experienced seven cases of sheep worrying
in the past year, resulting in five sheep injured and two sheep
killed per attack. Estimated financial losses through incidents
of sheep worrying of up to £50,000 were recorded, with an average
across all respondents of £1,570. However, most respondents
received no or very little compensation.
The Bill would repeal the Dogs (Protection of Livestock) Act 1953
and set out new increased powers for the police under the broader
scope of livestock species and locations covered under the Bill.
Improved powers would enable the police to respond to livestock
worrying incidents more effectively, making it easier for them to
collect evidence and in the most serious cases to seize and
detain dogs to reduce the risk of further incidents.
I commend the work that the Government have already done to
implement reforms on animal welfare, including passing the Animal
Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022 and working on an animal sentience
committee to advise the Government on policies that impact the
welfare of animals; announcing that they will make cat
microchipping compulsory, as it is for dogs; introducing new
powers for police and courts to tackle the illegal and cruel
sport of hare coursing through the Police, Crime, Sentencing and
Courts Act 2022; protecting elephants by passing the Ivory Act
2018; and backing Bills to increase the maximum penalties for
animal cruelty from six months to five years’ imprisonment, to
introduce penalties for animal welfare offences and to ban glue
traps, all of which have received Royal Assent.
(Crawley) (Con)
I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute to this very
important debate. May I add to that list of legislation? I am
very grateful the Government have supported the Hunting Trophies
(Import Prohibition) Bill, which I am pleased to say completed
its Second Reading in the Commons just over a week ago. I urge
the Government to complete the journey on animal welfare issues
in this Parliament by ensuring that the Animal Welfare (Kept
Animals) Bill comes back to Report stage at the earliest
opportunity.
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for that intervention and of
course he is absolutely right; I have no qualms in saying that
the list of legislation is quite impressive, with huge
achievements that I am very proud of the Government for
undertaking. However, the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill
would be one of the greatest leaps forward in animal welfare that
this country has seen in years. It enjoys cross-party support and
was part of our election manifesto.
I look forward to hearing the Minister’s update on the progress
of the Bill and to hearing him outline what steps his Department
is taking to iron out any of the issues that may have arisen
throughout the consultation phases, so that we can get the Bill
moving again and get it on to the statute book.
(North Antrim) (DUP)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on how he has introduced the
debate. Before he comes to the end of his peroration, may I say
to him that one of the most significant threats to animal welfare
in Northern Ireland, believe it or not, is the Northern Ireland
protocol? As of the middle of this month, 50% of pharmaceutical
products for animals will no longer be available in Northern
Ireland, both for on-farm animals and domestic pets. That threat
must be urgently addressed by His Majesty’s Government before our
animals in Northern Ireland are placed in any further danger.
I am grateful to the hon. Member for that intervention. Not that
long ago, I led a debate on behalf of the Petitions Committee on
invoking article 16 and it became very clear from the research
that we did before the debate that there was a significant impact
on animals as a result of the protocol, so I hope that the
Minister can also update the House about discussions with EU
counterparts on the effect of the protocol on animals.
I also congratulate the hon. Member on getting an intervention in
as I was about to finish my speech. To reiterate, I would be very
grateful if the Minister could provide the reassurances and
updates that so many people have turned up to Westminster Hall
today to hear, so that we can get the Bill moving again, get it
into law and cement the UK’s reputation as a world leader on
animal welfare.
4.49pm
(Ellesmere Port and Neston)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair this afternoon, Mr
Hollobone. I thank the hon. Member for Carshalton and Wallington
() for a pretty comprehensive
introduction to this debate. I am sure that many of his points
will be repeated by other Members, because they are important
points that get to the heart of the petition. As we know, animal
welfare is important to many of our constituents. I have received
many emails, as I am sure many other Members have, from
constituents and organisations that are concerned about the
status of the Bill, which has seemingly, during its passage
through Parliament, been left adrift by the Government.
It is pleasing that, through the direct intervention of the
public and the Petitions Committee, the Government will now be
held to account for the Bill’s status. As has been mentioned, we
are talking about a manifesto commitment from 2019. We can see
the Petition Committee’s power; it has called this debate, and
the Minister must now give us concrete answers on the Bill’s
status. There are important positives here on how to hold the
Government to account through the system. This e-petition has
been an opportunity for approximately 108,000 people so far to
ask important questions of Government.
There have been a few personnel changes in Government this year,
and that may provide some of the reason for the delay. However,
the reason why so many people find the delay frustrating is that
the Bill concerns so many matters on which there is cross-party
support; it should not really matter who is sitting behind the
ministerial desk on any given day. My hon. Friend the Member for
Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport () said on an earlier occasion
that the Government seemed to have taken inspiration from
Labour’s animal welfare manifesto. While that was obviously a
tongue-in-cheek remark, it shows that there is an overlap in our
broad positions. That should, in theory, make this an easier Bill
to get through Parliament. Politics is often criticised for being
adversarial, and while there are measures in the Bill that
deserve greater debate and scrutiny—I will come on to that—the
fact that its broad thrust is supported ought to mean that it is
passed sooner rather than later.
(Battersea) (Lab)
My hon. Friend is making an excellent opening to his speech. Does
he agree that the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill will be
world-leading in the protection it provides against cruelty to
animals? I represent one of the leading organisations in the
field, Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, which is doing fantastic
work on this. That included writing a cross-party letter, which
we led on to get the Government to take action. He mentioned
cross-party support; does he agree that it is important to note
how much support the Bill has, and that any continued delay by
this Government is not acceptable? He surely agrees that the
Government must today set out a timeline showing when the Bill
will come back to complete its remaining stages.
I am sure the Minister has noted my hon. Friend’s request; we
look forward to hearing what he says on that. My hon. Friend’s
point about Battersea Dogs and Cats Home is important, because it
is coming up to Christmas, and there will unfortunately be people
buying pets from abroad; that may not have happened if the Bill
had already been passed.
(Swansea West)
(Lab/Co-op)
My hon. Friend mentioned cross-party support; there is lots of
it. However, does he accept that under the Trade (Australia and
New Zealand) Bill, cattle in Australia can be moved for 48 hours
without rest, and there is mulesing of sheep? Also, lots of
pregnant dogs now come across from Ireland, are given a
caesarean, and are then sent back; they keep going back and
forth. There are all sorts of problems, particularly with border
control, under the existing regime that give rise to animal
cruelty. That should be sorted out. So it is not all a matter of
cross-party support.
I note what my hon. Friend says, and refer him to what the Dogs
Trust and Cats Protection say: they note rampant abuse of the
pets travel scheme by illegal traders; we need action on that.
Laws that had the good intention of allowing families to take
pets abroad are being abused to allow very young and pregnant
animals to come to Britain for sale. I think everyone would
agree, despite what my hon. Friend says, that those rules in
particular need tightening up. No-one wants the UK market for
pets to be flooded with unscrupulous sellers, commercially
importing animals through the back door.
(Neath) (Ind)
Will my hon. Friend give way?
I am popular today.
My hon. Friend is making an excellent speech and is a champion
for animal welfare. Does he agree that the measures in the Animal
Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill to reduce puppy smuggling would also
have a positive effect on online puppy sales, which are the
subject of the campaign otherwise known as Reggie’s law?
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The Bill places a limit on
the number of cats, ferrets and dogs that can be transported,
which is an issue that we need to look at closely, and it
includes provisions on mutilation, minimum age and pregnancy. It
builds on work from over the past decade. Before we stray too far
down that path, there are other matters I wish to talk about,
particularly the concerns raised by Chester zoo.
Hon. Members may not be aware that Chester zoo forms part of my
constituency—obviously, not the main part, because that is in
Chester, but parts of its land are in Ellesmere Port and Neston.
Lots of my constituents work there, and it does a lot of great
work with schools in my constituency. Chester zoo is a world
leader in conservation work. It works with over 100 partners in
more than 20 countries to recover threatened wildlife and restore
its habitats. It is developing a master plan to halt or reverse
the decline of around 200 highly threatened plant and animal
populations, and has a target of improving 250,000 hectares of
landscape for wildlife in at least six locations around the
world. Chester zoo continues to be England’s most popular
paid-for visitor attraction outside London, and much of that
success can be attributed to its visitors wanting to be a part of
that conservation mission. Of course, those visitors help fund
that conservation.
Chester zoo welcomes the Government’s ambition to further enhance
conservation standards across the sector. Zoos across the globe
contribute more than $350 million annually to species
conservation programmes in the wild, making them the third
largest contributor to species conservation in the world. UK zoos
alone make up 10% of that total—that is impressive and something
we should be proud of in this country. Most of that amount comes
from the large charitable zoos, which receive no direct public
subsidy and generate their funds by being popular tourist
attractions; Chester zoo is a good example.
UK zoos support over 800 projects in 105 countries, providing
direct conservation action for 488 animal and plant species. It
is vital that their commitment to conservation is not hampered
because a Secretary of State has greater powers and flexibility,
but does not use them in a way that would help their efforts. The
Bill will enable the Secretary of State to specify different
standards depending on the type of collection. A larger zoo, for
example, will have a different type of collection from an
aquarium. Ellesmere Port and Neston also has an aquarium: the
Blue Planet at Cheshire Oaks. It is important that the power and
flexibility that the Secretary of State seeks to have in the Bill
are used in a way that enhances the conservation efforts of
zoos.
I understand that the Bill will undergo a number of amendments,
which will set standards for a broad range of conservation
activities, and that zoos will be incentivised to maximise the
impact of those activities, which is something that we all want
to see. Does the Minister acknowledge that the amendments will
raise the issue of how we ensure that conservation work is
maximised? Could he give any assurances of what the final outcome
will be? It is essential that the Government’s zoo standards
reflect a broad and expansive definition of conservation that
recognises the length and breadth of work carried out by places
such as Chester zoo. Much of that work takes place in the zoo. It
includes the world-class care given by the keepers, feeding,
bedding, veterinary attention, the facilities, scientific
development and the carefully planned and co-ordinated breeding
programmes, which are an essential component of a holistic,
planned approach to species recovery. I visited Chester zoo over
the summer with Mr Speaker, and we saw some of the new species
being brought back into circulation. I could not actually see
them, because they were very small, but I was assured that they
were there somewhere. We need to ensure that there is a broader
understanding of zoo conservation in the revised standards.
Chester zoo has been working with the Ignite Teaching School
Alliance to enable schools to build their curriculum around
conservation. It is working with around 80 schools so far. I
recently had the pleasure of listening to pupils from St
Bernard’s Roman Catholic Primary School in my constituency about
the work they have been doing with the zoo on conservation. I
have no doubt that it is valuable work—it helps children to
increase their understanding of the world around them—and I hope
that that very important contribution to the next generation’s
understanding of conservation will be supported.
Our primary concern is that if we remove the conservation
requirements from primary legislation and give the Secretary of
State greater powers and flexibility, there will not be the same
parliamentary scrutiny that we have enjoyed to date. While the
Government have consulted on the reviewed standards of modern zoo
practice, there will be no statutory requirement for Ministers to
consult on any further updates. We believe that there should be a
requirement for consultations on any future changes. Hopefully
the Minister can answer this: if there are changes in future,
what will Parliament’s role be in scrutinising the standards, and
ensuring that they are maintained?
Finally, the Bill puts no statutory requirement on future
Ministers to involve the Zoo Experts Committee in any review of
the standards, or indeed to formally respond to any of its
guidance. The Zoo Experts Committee and Ministers should be made
more publicly accountable for their advice and decisions, so that
there is greater transparency, just as there is for the Animal
Sentience Committee; it publishes independent advice, to which
Ministers are obliged to respond.
In conclusion, the Bill will lead to the most significant changes
for zoos and aquariums in decades. There is concern that removing
conservation requirements from primary legislation, and powers
consequently being handed to the Secretary of State, will make it
harder to ensure the appropriate scrutiny and transparency of
future changes. It is not, I think, an unreasonable proposition
that different types of zoos should have different conservation
requirements, but how that will work in practice is clearly of
significant concern. The debate has shown so far that there is a
great deal of support for the Bill. I hope that when the Minister
responds, we get a clear timetable that shows when we will see it
again.
5.02pm
(Camborne and Redruth)
(Con)
I feel quite close to the Bill, since it has my name on the cover
and started its passage through Parliament all those days ago
when I was Secretary of State. I will not spend all of my time
going through the various matters that it covers; others will no
doubt do that. The issues were also dealt with at some length by
the Conservative party before we put most of them in our 2019
Conservative manifesto. The matters covered by the Bill were then
debated somewhat exhaustively in Government during the last
Session; the Minister was then Chief Whip, and was party to some
of those discussions. The Bill has also already been debated at
some length in Parliament, having passed both Second Reading and
Committee stage.
The Bill is packed with commitments from the Conservative
manifesto, including totemic measures such as the ban on live
exports, which we would have been unable to introduce as an EU
member. It toughens up the rules on the importation of puppies,
to deal with a long-standing problem there. Finally, it would ban
keeping primates as pets. It is a popular Bill that has
near-universal public support, and the Government should now find
the time to proceed to Report as quickly as possible.
We often hear representations in these situations about the lack
of parliamentary time; again, my right hon. Friend the Minister
knows how business managers will play on the issue of
parliamentary time. However, I do not think lack of parliamentary
time is a particularly persuasive argument in the case of this
Bill, given the stage it has reached; it probably needs only
about five hours to get through Report. Then, of course, it goes
to the House of Lords, and our noble Friends in the Lords like to
be kept active. We must not disappoint them; it is important that
we keep them busy. There are plenty of hours between midnight and
4 am, for instance, during which the Bill can keep moving,
provided that consideration of it commences at the right time in
the other place.
I point out to the Minister that when it comes to animal welfare,
the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has
already made an offer to parliamentary business managers that
freed up parliamentary time. As he knows, the Hunting Trophies
(Import Prohibition) Bill was once to have been a Government
Bill, but it was decided at the beginning of this Session that we
would try to progress it as a private Member’s Bill, so DEFRA has
already made an important down payment to business managers,
giving them time.
Arguments about a lack of parliamentary time will be
unpersuasive. I hope that the Minister will not make such an
argument. I have every confidence that he will not. If there is
doubt about whether the Government will take the Animal Welfare
(Kept Animals) Bill forward, it will be down to something else: a
lack of confidence somewhere in Government about navigating the
Bill through Parliament. I understand that, and will address
it.
My right hon. Friend has been a strong advocate for animal
welfare improvements over many years. Although it is infuriating
that it has taken so long to get some things through Parliament,
he has done so, while showing great insight and interest in these
matters. Does he agree that it is slightly strange that this
Bill, which is supported wholeheartedly by all animal welfare
charities, is being delayed, yet we are finding parliamentary
time for the Genetic Technology (Precision Breeding) Bill, which
animal welfare charities have concerns about? That Bill is racing
through both Houses.
My hon. Friend makes an important point. I would find time for
both of them, because I am also very committed to the Genetic
Technology (Precision Breeding) Bill, but I understand that
animal welfare issues can be contentious and emotive. Some
veterans of the last Parliament may recall that when the European
Union (Withdrawal) Act 2019 was being passed, there was a
controversy about whether some largely irrelevant recitals in EU
law about the existence of animal sentience should be brought
into a British Act of Parliament. At the time, the legal advice
was that those words would behave in a very different way when
placed in a British Act of Parliament than they did as some
benign, largely irrelevant recital in EU law, and that therefore
we had to think more carefully about how to do that.
At the time, many Conservative MPs received Twitter abuse from
people saying, “You’ve just voted to say that animals don’t feel
pain.” That was always a lie. No Member of this House voted to
say such a thing; people voted to say that the way the EU
provision was drafted did not work correctly in UK law. That is
why we had to revisit the matter, which is exactly what we did
with the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022. When it was
introduced, there were anxieties that it could become a Christmas
tree Bill, and that there would be all sorts of difficult
amendments, but in the end it progressed without incident. In
fact, I would go so far as to say that it turned out to be
perhaps the least controversial Bill that the Government passed
in the last Session. The Animal Sentience Committee is about to
be set up. It already has, in Michael Seals, a sensible,
illustrious chair, and it is ready to go.
I think we can avoid the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill
becoming a Christmas tree Bill. It is open to the Government to
determine the long titles of Bills, to ensure that they remain
focused on the subject that the Government intend to address.
That issue was thought about at some length when we designed the
structure of the Bill, and other Bills. As a result, the Bill has
a very tight long title. That was by design, not accident. Also,
a huge amount of thought has already been given in the Department
to a handling strategy to navigate the Bill through its various
stages of Parliament. I have had discussions with the Minister on
that, and I do not want to give away to those present what a
concession strategy might be, but virtually every conceivable
amendment to the Bill has been thought about in advance, and can
be managed.
Some of us voted to leave the European Union because we really
wanted to take back control. We wanted to make our own laws and
be a genuinely self-governing country once again, but with that
comes a responsibility, in some ways. We cannot just hide behind
the EU and expect it to do our dirty work, or to do difficult,
contentious things on our behalf, as we often used to on animal
welfare issues. We cannot blame the European Union any more. We
have to take ownership, including of difficult, contentious or
even emotive issues, and we must challenge ourselves to avoid a
tendency to duck and dive and get by without tackling those
difficult decisions.
I hope that the Government will have the courage to grasp this
Bill and move it forward, recognising that there could be some
emotive or contentious issues to be managed. I believe that
Parliament must develop the maturity to be able to debate these
issues sensibly. There is a good precedent in proceedings on the
Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022, in that although Members in
all parts of the House tabled probing amendments, they recognised
that, ultimately, they had to be sensible and responsible to
ensure that the Bill entered the statute book. I therefore
believe that we can do this.
I say to my right hon. Friend the Minister that although helpful
Back Benchers—including helpful Back Benchers our side—have
tabled a number of probing amendments, he should not be spooked
by that. As one who started this Bill, I am willing to help
Ministers and play my part in ensuring that we manage those
probing amendments by explaining to certain hon. Members why
certain amendments might not be necessary after all.
(South Thanet) (Con)
I thank my right hon. Friend for raising issues of Brexit in his
observations. I know he will be aware, but I will emphasise it
here, of the absolute fiasco that happened at Ramsgate port back
in September 2012, when more than 40 animals had to be euthanised
because of the appalling vessel that was used for the
cross-channel live animal exports. That has been a stain on
Ramsgate, and I salute Kent Action Against Live Exports and
others who have kept the issue alive. My right hon. Friend came
down and joined me to see what was happening there. Activists are
frustrated that, post Brexit, progress has not been made. I am
sure that he would join me in recommending that the Government
take that to a conclusion sooner rather than later.
I very much agree with my hon. Friend. Indeed, I remember
visiting Ramsgate and having to deal with that case, which was
even worse than he describes, as Thanet District Council had to
pay more than £2 million in compensation to the foreign company,
which took it to court for trying to put in place a localised
ban. That is the kind of thing that used to happen when we were
in the European Union. We now have the power to prevent that
happening, and that is why I urge my right hon. Friend the
Minister for Food, Farming and Fisheries to work with us—with
Conservative Members; we are all on his side—to ensure that the
Bill is carried through Parliament. We only need about five hours
for Report stage. I ask the same of Opposition Members.
Does the right hon. Gentleman accept that, because of the botched
Brexit, we have ended up with a situation where we have been
forced to have those Australian trade deals, which he has
criticised, at a rapid pace, which will give rise to importing
badly treated animals? The problems of pregnant dogs being
brought over and abused on a great scale, which I mentioned
earlier, is also a result of our not having the harmonised border
control that we would have in the single market. The idea that we
are better off is absurd.
I do not want this debate to drift too far into the historical
question about leaving the European Union. Suffice it to say that
I strongly disagree with the hon. Gentleman. I want us to have an
independent trade policy, but I want us to take a more muscular
approach to those trade agreements. I made that point some weeks
ago. As I said, I hope that my right hon. Friend the Minister
will find the time in the next few weeks to take this Bill
through to Report.
5.13pm
(East Antrim) (DUP)
At the outset, let me say that I am sure that all of us have
received numerous letters from constituents about this issue,
because animal welfare is at the heart of the views of many of
the ordinary people in this country. They want animals to be
treated decently and expect the law to ensure that they are. The
Government, of course, now have the power to do that.
I want to make a couple of points about how slow the progress of
legislation has been. Many of the Bill’s provisions cannot and
will not apply to Northern Ireland. My hon. Friend the Member for
North Antrim () pointed out that the protocol will affect the
ability to treat animals because veterinary medicines and so on
will not be available, but some of the Bill’s provisions will not
be allowed to apply to Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland remains
part of the single market and is subject to single market rules,
so many of the restrictions on exporting or importing animals
cannot apply because they will be regarded as restrictions on
trade within the single market. Even though we remain part of the
United Kingdom, EU law on the movement of animals and goods still
applies to Northern Ireland. Having said that, I still support
the Bill.
A manifesto commitment was made, an action plan was drawn up and
a Bill was written and started to proceed through the House, so
those who signed the petition and hon. Members who have spoken
today are bemused about why it has suddenly been stopped towards
the end of its stages in the House of Commons. The Bill has
cross-party support, as well as widespread public and sectoral
support, and many of the groups campaigning for changes to animal
welfare provisions have given their assent to it. Many people are
bemused that at a time when the Government ought to be looking
for as much good will as they can obtain, given the other
difficulties they are facing, the Bill has suddenly stopped
moving forward.
It would be good to hear the Minister explain the rationale for
this. I cannot accept the argument that there is not sufficient
parliamentary time. One only has to look at the number of times
in the past few weeks that Parliament has finished early to see
that there is certainly time. Okay, the closure of business was
unplanned, but I am sure those who organise the parliamentary
timetable are cognisant of the fact that we have not used the
full time every day.
I would also have thought that this legislation would be a
priority for the Government. They dearly want to show that Brexit
has worked, and Ministers have repeatedly been asked to give us
examples of some of the benefits of Brexit. Well, here is a Bill
that illustrates the benefits that we as a nation can obtain from
the fact that we are no longer subject to some other body making
law in the United Kingdom. We can make the law ourselves without
having to worry that some European nations do not want a ban on
the live export of animals. We can make that decision
ourselves.
Hon. Members have talked about dogs being brought into the UK
from abusive situations in the Irish Republic, pregnant dogs
having caesareans and so on. That can happen because of the free
movement of goods and animals within the EU, but the Government
have an opportunity to stop it. There is a manifesto commitment,
and other parties are willing to co-operate with the Government
on this issue. There is support among the general public for the
measure, and there is sectoral support for it. There is therefore
no reason why the Government should be afraid of bringing the
Bill forward. I do not doubt that amendments will be brought
forward, as with all legislation. If the amendments are
reasonable, there is no harm in accepting them. If they are not
reasonable, they can be argued against, and the Government have
the votes to ensure that no unreasonable amendments go through.
Many people will ask why we did not go ahead with the
legislation.
Another important thing is the benefits that the legislation will
bring. Farmers in my constituency have in the past made
representations to me about sheep worrying and the losses and the
stress such incidents cause. It is not just a financial loss, by
the way. Most farmers love their animals and care for them; they
do not want them to be abused by dogs worrying them or whatever.
Apart from the financial hardship, animal worrying by dogs is
something that concerns the farming community, yet here we have a
piece of legislation that would benefit the farming community. At
least there would be greater powers for the police to investigate
and punish those responsible, either because they let their dogs
run free or because they take them into situations where they
know they should have them under control, but do not.
How many families suffer as a result of puppy smuggling,
especially given the prices paid for some breeds now? They buy a
puppy, believing they are buying it with proper paperwork and
proper protection, only to find that the dog they have grown to
love has not been properly treated before they purchased it, so
they have to either meet costly vets’ bills or lose the dog
altogether. We need protection for those people and for the dogs
as well, which in some cases are mutilated or brought into this
country in non-commercial vehicles. The hon. Member for
Carshalton and Wallington () mentioned earlier a 260%
increase in the number of animals being intercepted because the
rules are not complied with. That figure shows that, because of
the increased demand, the increased prices and the profitability
of the trade, there are criminals who are prepared not only to
break the law, but to harm animals in pursuit of their profits.
At least the Bill would deal with that.
The last point I want to make is about constituents whose dogs
have been stolen. Currently, if somebody lifts a dog from
someone’s garden, it is treated in the same way as if they had
lifted a garden gnome—an inanimate object—from someone’s garden,
despite the impacts such thefts have on families and on the
animal, which is taken from an environment that it knows to an
environment that it does not know, sometimes to be ill-treated.
It is important that we have the legislation.
There are good reasons—selfish reasons—for the Government to
pursue the legislation and get it through. There are also the
good reasons of animal protection and protecting individuals who
have animals that they love. I hope that we get a positive
response from the Minister. As I do every time I speak in the
House of Commons, I emphasise the importance of Northern Ireland
being included in UK legislation. I know this is not the
responsibility of the Minister answering the debate today, but it
is important that all efforts are made to ensure that the impact
of the protocol is removed from Northern Ireland.
5.24pm
(West Dorset) (Con)
It is a pleasure to speak in the debate this afternoon. If it
runs to the full three hours, Mr Hollobone, I apologise for
having to leave a little early.
I thank and congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Carshalton
and Wallington (), who presented the
petition to the House in such a compelling manner. I should
inform the House of my interest as the son of a tenant beef
farmer in my constituency of West Dorset. I also thank all those
at the back: the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals, the Conservative Animal Welfare Foundation, Battersea
Dogs and Cats Home, and many others. I am grateful for all the
briefings that they have provided for this debate and for the
last three years to Members who have been in Parliament since
2019 and have been championing the animal welfare cause. We very
much appreciate it.
Back in 2020, I brought a private Member’s Bill to the House. The
Animal Welfare (Sentencing) Bill, which went into law, increased
the maximum sentence for those who are cruel to animals from six
months to five years. Like the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals)
Bill, it was widely supported across the House. No one voted
against it. I was very pleased about that, because we were a bit
short of time. It went through, and today in England and Wales,
people who have been cruel to animals are now spending a lot
longer in jail than they would have before.
In my speech on the Second Reading of my Bill, I said it was
important that we address the live export of animals for
fattening and slaughter. In that debate, I clearly articulated
the evidence—brought forward, I think, by the BBC—that animals,
primarily cows, raised in the United Kingdom were being
slaughtered in Lebanon, Libya and even further afield. This is
why we must bring the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill back to
the House of Commons and get it through. My hon. Friend the
Member for South Thanet (), who is not in his place,
referred to Kent Action Against Live Exports, which deserves a
huge tribute for all the work that it has done. That group has
shone a light on the most disgraceful conditions that our animals
have been forced to endure, having to travel hours and hours all
the way down to southern Europe. That is not acceptable.
There are some in the House who disagree about the value of
leaving the European Union, but we must recognise the reality
that being part of the European Union required freedom of
movement for goods and services, and that animals, including cows
and sheep, are part of that. Hon. Members have made the point,
very soundly in my view, that we are now able to control our own
laws in this respect. The Government should not hang on a moment
longer than they absolutely have to before grasping the
issue.
In West Dorset, there have been countless very sad cases of
animal worrying by dogs leading to the death of sheep and cows.
For example, very sadly, Gladis, a highland cow, and her unborn
calf died as a result of her falling off the edge of Eggardon
Hill, which is a very steep drop. Such cases mean that this is a
very live matter for my constituents. Many of us have campaigned
on the issue for a long time. I started that campaign as part of
my private Member’s Bill, and continue to this day.
I understand that the Government have a lot of work to do—I am
pleased that they do—but we do not have so much work that we
cannot fit in an extra few hours. I state on the record, Mr
Hollobone, that I would be very happy to spend a bit longer in
this place on a Friday if that was necessary to get the Bill
through, because it is so important that we do so. I would be
happy to tell the Chief Whip the same following this debate.
I will conclude my remarks by once again thanking all those who
have campaigned so vigorously on the animal welfare agenda that
so many of us support. I petition my right hon. Friend the
Minister to take heed of our concerns. If I can help any more
than I already am helping to bring the Bill back to the House
urgently, I would be delighted to hear from him or any member of
the Government.
5.30pm
(North Devon) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under you as Chair, Mr Hollobone. I
thank my hon. Friend the Member for Carshalton and Wallington
() for securing this
important debate, as well as the Petitions Committee for allowing
time for those of us whose constituents have written to them
copiously on this subject to debate it. I warmly welcome the
Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill; indeed, I was the
parliamentary private secretary when it was in Committee, just
over a year ago. I very much hope that the new team at DEFRA will
ensure that the Bill gets going once again, and that we can see
it go through.
I particularly welcome the Bill’s recognition that dogs are so
much more than property—indeed, hopefully, all pets will be
considered more than property. Some 97% of households with pets
view those pets as part of the family. That is no surprise: the
UK is a country of animal lovers, with six in 10 households
having some kind of pet and the British people sharing their
lives with around 13 million dogs. Speaking from very personal
experience this weekend, our four-legged friends ensure that we
go out whatever the weather, be it darkness or light, to exercise
them. If we are entirely honest about it, we treat them more like
one of the family than the actual family.
The Bill continues the work that has put the UK at the forefront
of animal welfare. We are home to the RSPCA, the first animal
welfare charity in the world, which is now approaching its 200th
birthday. That care for our animals shows in public surveys: the
RSPCA found that 86% of the British public support measures to
stop the illegal puppy trade, while 76% support a ban on the
import of dogs with cropped ears. Since 2012, the pet travel
scheme established to make it easier for people to take their
pets on holiday with them has been abused by unscrupulous pet
traders. That scheme allows people to bring in up to five pets
per person in each motor vehicle. Those traders bring in very
young puppies, often in poor health and weakened by their long
journey without suitable care. Those puppies are then sold on in
the UK to unsuspecting buyers, who often put significant
resources into trying to save their new family member—not always
successfully.
Traders have responded to moves by potential buyers to be more
responsible, including asking to see the puppy with the mother,
by importing heavily pregnant mothers. Again, those mothers are
not adequately cared for: the Dogs Trust, as part of its tireless
campaign to end puppy smuggling, has reported that it has taken
103 pregnant dogs into care in the past two years. As we are in
the run-up to Christmas, those numbers are increasing, with 17
taken in in September and October alone. I take this opportunity
to thank the Dogs Trust for all its work on this issue, and in
particular its branch in Ilfracombe in my constituency of North
Devon for all the wonderful work it does locally. I just wish it
was not quite so busy, particularly with this issue.
Puppy smuggling is worth an estimated £3 million, and I welcome
the move in this Bill to limit the number of animals that can be
brought in to five, which will limit the amount of profit these
traders can make from their barbarous actions. However, I hope
the Government will consider supporting the Dogs Trust’s call to
lower that number further to three, as 97.7% of dog owners in the
UK own three or fewer dogs. I also ask that the Department look
at bringing in visual checks as a requirement through secondary
legislation. That would further hinder traders looking to bring
in very young, sick, or heavily pregnant dogs. Unfortunately,
there is evidence that overseas vets are forging pet passports,
so documentation and identity checks alone are not robust enough
to protect those dogs.
Our dogs are sentient animals, friends and family members, highly
attuned to the emotional state of their family. When times are
tough, they support us and bring love and joy to people across
the UK. They deserve our support and protection. I hope that the
Bill comes back to the House swiftly, so that by next Christmas
fewer animals suffer at the hands of unscrupulous traders.
As a dog owner myself, I have focused primarily on puppy
smuggling, but it would be remiss not to mention concerns—voiced
by the Blue Cross—that in the Bill’s current format, the theft of
a much-loved pet excludes cats and horses. There is clearly scope
to extend the theft clause. I suspect the 11 million cats in the
country are loved almost as much as my beloved Labrador, Henry,
and their theft would be equally distressing. Although horses
generally do not live in their owners’ houses, the bond they have
with their owners is clearly very great, given how long so many
of them live.
I hope that the Government reconsider theft beyond just dogs, as
we are a nation of animal lovers. Unfortunately, that puts a
value on to our pets that others exploit beyond just our canine
companions. There is much to commend in the Bill, and I very much
hope that the new ministerial team at DEFRA will expedite its
parliamentary progress to the statute book.
5.36pm
(Bury North) (Con)
I always agree with every word said by my hon. Friend the Member
for North Devon (), and I endorse every single
word of her powerful speech today. Everyone who has chosen to
participate in this debate will say that, quite simply, the Bill
is a good piece of legislation. It is needed, and we encourage
the Government to get it on the statute book at the earliest
opportunity. This debate gives Members an opportunity to discuss
issues related to the Bill, which is important. As my right hon.
Friend the Member for North Thanet ( ) said, Conservative Back
Benchers will do nothing that will risk the Bill making the
statute book. However, we are able—quite rightly—to raise
concerns and suggest additions. My hon. Friend the Member for
North Devon did just that when she raised concerns that cats are
excluded from the new offence of taking a dog without lawful
authority.
I want to comment on the scope of the Bill. Perhaps it is my
tender years in this place, but I look to the eminence of my
right hon. Friend the Member for Camborne and Redruth () to correct me if anything I
say is wrong. I think we all received a brief from the
Conservative Animal Welfare Foundation. We are told that the Bill
is broad-ranging and includes farm animals and domestic pets. I
took that as a starting point, and asked what the phrase “kept
animals” means if we take it away from the nature of the Bill. I
could not find a satisfactory dictionary definition, so I went to
the Bill’s long title, which says the Bill is to
“make provision about the welfare of certain kept animals that
are...imported into, or exported from Great Britain.”
It appears that the scope of the Bill relates to the import and
export of farm animals and domestic pets, but that does not seem
to be the case. As we have just heard, one of the provisions
relates directly to an offence that can only be committed when
taking a dog without lawful authority in the jurisdiction of this
country. The Bill presents an opportunity for the Government to
consider not many amendments, but probing amendments that are not
simply related to import or export—however important those issues
are.
We need to look at the scope of the Bill in relation to pets and
domestic animals. As my hon. Friend the Member for North Devon
said, the reason for that is important to us all. My dog Bertie
is my best mate; he is part of my family. I will take any
opportunity I get to talk about animals and how we treat domestic
pets. The scope of the Bill hopefully allows us to do that. I
stand to be corrected if I am wrong.
You would expect me, Mr Hollobone, to take the opportunity to
refer to the Pets (Microchips) Bill—my private Member’s Bill that
I have put before the House on three occasions. I will briefly
mention why it is appropriate to talk about this issue, and to at
least consider it being part of the provisions of the Animal
Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill. Gizmo’s law, which is part of my
Bill, comes from a campaign run by a lady called Helena Abrahams
from Bury North. As her constituency MP, I have a duty to talk
about that campaign; it has been going on for many years.
Many Members may not know this, but if a cat is found deceased in
a local authority area, the general action of a council—not all
councils, because I am sure that some councils will be outraged
by what I am about to say—is that that cat is immediately
disposed of in landfill. There is no scanning of the microchip;
there is no attempt to reunite that cat with its owner. When we
consider the point that my hon. Friend the Member for North Devon
made, namely that cats as well as dogs are valued members of our
families and a part of who we are as individuals, we should at
least consider whether legislation can be brought in to address
that situation.
Working with a pet food company, the Gizmo’s law campaign has
been able to provide scanners to all local authorities in the
country to allow them to scan a cat to see whether there is a
contact address, and then to give the owner the opportunity to
come and collect that cat, if that is what they want to do; if
not, the cat will be disposed of. At the heart of a Bill that is
about the best of animal welfare, the cost of such a scheme is
not even minimal; the cost is non-existent. However, it could be
a positive addition to the Bill.
My hon. Friend raises a really important issue relating to what
is called Gizmo’s law. I know that the Department has looked at
this issue multiple times over many years. Indeed, four or five
years ago, it was a requirement for the Highways Agency to scan
animals—that was an administrative requirement handed down by the
Department for Transport. However, does he not think that that
may be something that could be addressed in a non-legislative
way, such as simply making it a condition of some of the grants
that local authorities receive, so that they actually show the
due diligence to scan roadkill cats and dogs when they encounter
them?
As ever, my right hon. Friend makes a powerful point. However, I
would argue that legislation is the correct vehicle for doing
this. Establishing a legal duty reflects what I hope would be
Parliament’s view as to the necessity for such a condition.
However, I fully accept the point that has been made and his
suggestion may well be another way of dealing with this
matter.
The second part of my private Member’s Bill is Tuk’s law. In
different circumstances, my hon. Friend the Member for Penrith
and The Border (Dr Hudson), with his expertise in this area,
would be able to correct what I am about to say. In essence,
however, a person might take a healthy animal to a veterinary
surgeon and they say to a vet—again, this only occurs very
infrequently—that they would like, for whatever reason, a healthy
dog to be euthanised or put down. That has happened in the past
and it continues to happen infrequently.
Tuk’s law would require veterinary surgeons and veterinary staff
to scan what is called the rescue back-up—the chip that is on the
dog—which would highlight the breeder or somebody else, at least
to give that healthy dog an opportunity for a life, or a
different set of circumstances. Whatever the reason is that a
healthy dog is brought into a veterinary surgeon, we should be
doing everything possible, if that dog is not a threat to human
beings, to rehouse it elsewhere. Tuk’s law is a duty to do
that.
My hon. Friend the Member for Penrith and The Border and I have
had the opportunity to discuss this issue and we will not turn it
into a debate now. However, for a Bill—I have talked about its
scope before—that aims to address directly how we as a Parliament
and we as a country view our beloved animals, whether they are
farm animals or pets, it is an important matter that should be
considered in the round when this Bill is brought back. It is a
good Bill and I wholeheartedly support every comment that has
been made so far.
I have talked to my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State
about my private Member’s Bill. If the Minister wishes to discuss
it with me further, I am happy to do so at any point. It is a
good private Member’s Bill, it costs nothing, and it adds to the
great strides that our Government have taken in respect of animal
welfare since we came into power in 2019.
5.44pm
(Penrith and The Border)
(Con)
It is a great privilege, Mr Hollobone, to serve under your
chairmanship and it is a pleasure to follow my hon. Friend the
Member for Bury North ().
First, I declare a strong personal and professional interest in
this piece of legislation: as a veterinary surgeon, I am
passionate about animal health and welfare. I was privileged to
be a member of the Public Bill Committee for this important Bill
and it has my full support. As we have heard, it covers important
areas such as primates, puppy smuggling, pet theft, livestock
worrying, zoos and the movement of animals for slaughter. I urge
the Government to press ahead with this important
legislation.
I commend all the groups, organisations and charities that have
campaigned in this domain for many years now, such as Cats
Protection, World Horse Welfare, the Conservative Animal Welfare
Foundation, the Dogs Trust, Battersea, the RSPCA, the Blue Cross
and the British Veterinary Association, to name just a few. I was
privileged to lead a letter just this week to Ministers with 63
other parliamentarians and the Dogs Trust to that effect, urging
them to press ahead so that we can tackle this scourge. We have
heard a lot about the scourge of puppy smuggling, and this Bill
can try and stamp it out. In the UK, we have the highest
standards of animal health and welfare, and we are a beacon to
the rest of the world. If we pass a piece of legislation such as
this, we can hold our heads high and actually set an example to
the rest of the world. Some of the things in this legislation can
be done with a stroke of a ministerial pen, or in secondary
legislation. We need to move forward and get some of this stuff
done.
I will highlight some key areas. We have heard from hon. Members
across the Chamber about the importance of pet theft. Obviously,
dogs are the high-profile animal in this legislation, and I have
campaigned—as have many of my colleagues and friends—to increase
its scope; it must include dogs, it must include cats and it must
include horses, ponies and farm animals as well. We must ensure
that it is all inclusive of the distress caused to the owners of
all animals when they are stolen and the distress caused to the
animals themselves, as mentioned by my right hon. Friend the
Member for Camborne and Redruth (), so I would like the scope
to be increased. The impact on people’s mental health when
animals are stolen, when animals suffer, when animals die and
when animals are killed should not be understated.
Much of the Bill also focuses on the movement of animals. I sit
on the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, and I
triggered an inquiry early on in Parliament on the movement of
animals across borders. This piece of legislation covers a lot of
that area, and it is important that it passes, so that we can
improve how animals are moved and checked and ensure that they
are not being moved in inappropriate circumstances.
I will start with small animals. We have heard a lot about puppy
smuggling and the awful practice of heavily pregnant dogs and
cats being moved in and around the country as part of the puppy
smuggling and kitten smuggling trade. We on the EFRA Committee
and the Bill Committee took harrowing evidence from the Dogs
Trust and other groups on these heavily pregnant animals, and we
have heard today about them being moved across borders, having
caesarean sections performed and being moved again, to and fro.
The harrowing details are so upsetting, and we must really try
and stamp that out. As my hon. Friend the Member for North Devon
() said, the Dogs Trust has
said that it has taken 103 pregnant dogs into care in the last
couple of years—and that is just the Dogs Trust. If that is just
one charity—just one group—how many other animals are undergoing
this cruel practice?
Currently, the movement of pregnant dogs is prohibited in the
last 10% of gestation—the last 10% of pregnancy—and it is hard to
assess that last 10% clinically. The Bill tries to push that back
to earlier in the pregnancy, perhaps into the last 30% to 50%, to
make the transport of heavily pregnant, late gestation dogs
illegal. We must ensure that we ban the movement of heavily
pregnant animals—of heavily pregnant dogs and cats—in commercial
licensing as well. Another part of the Bill that we looked at was
increasing the age of animals that are transported—for cats and
dogs, that age needs to be increased to at least six months. If
we do other health things as well, such as reinstating the rabies
titre checks and increasing the wait time post rabies vaccination
to 12 weeks, that will help protect the health of these dogs and
the biosecurity of our country, and it will raise the minimum age
at which these animals can be transported.
We have also heard that limits need to be set on the numbers of
pets per vehicle. We have heard that should be set at five—I
actually agree, although there is an argument that it could be
lowered to three. It is very important that this is per vehicle,
rather than per person. We have heard evidence on the EFRA
Committee of vans taking on extra foot passengers, and each foot
passenger then having an allocation of five dogs. There could
potentially then be 20 or 25 dogs in that vehicle. If the number
is restricted per vehicle—to three or five dogs—then that would
nail the loophole that those unscrupulous, awful people are
exploiting.
I very much welcome the fact that the Bill will take strong
action to ban the import of mutilated dogs. We have heard about
ear cropping, a horrific procedure that is rightly banned in this
country. It is done for no clinical reason whatsoever. It is a
cruel and painful process that makes the dogs’ ears erect for
merely cosmetic, visual or aesthetic reasons. It is awful—it is
hideous.
We in the Petitions Committee did a piece of work, and held a
debate in this Chamber, on ear cropping. One of the worrying bits
of evidence we received told us that young people were being
encouraged to buy dogs with cropped ears, because while their
import is illegal, they can be bought if they are already in the
UK. One of the big problems was that celebrities and public
figures were promoting, and making attractive, buying an
ear-cropped dog. Does my hon. Friend agree that if we are to
tackle ear cropping, the Government need to not only bring in
this legislation, but crack down on the glorification of ear
cropping?
Dr Hudson
I completely agree with my hon. Friend; he read my mind, because
I was about to cover that point. We need to ensure that owning
those dogs is not normalised in society. Ear cropping may be
illegal in this country, but as it is still legal to import
mutilated dogs, the dogs are still coming in. Also, awful people
are potentially mutilating in this country; there is evidence to
suggest that is going on. That is not done by vets, nor with any
form of anaesthesia or analgesia. It is an evil process that
mutilates dogs and needs to be stamped out.
Six out of 10 small animal vets have seen ear-cropped dogs in the
last year, and the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals reports that there has been an 86% increase in them in
the last year. As my hon. Friend said, we should not allow that
to be normalised in popular culture, with celebrities advocating
for it. Perhaps the celebrities do not realise how horrific the
procedure is that their pet had done. People looking at those
dogs think that they are acceptable. We have normalised that in
society. One of my favourite animated films is the wonderful
“Up”, but some of the dogs in it are cropped. “Up” is a few years
old now, but when another wonderful animation called “DC League
of Super Pets” came out this year, I was disheartened to see from
the poster that one of the lead dog characters is cropped. We are
normalising this in popular culture. It is a horrific process,
and we need to stamp it out. The Bill could stop those dogs
coming into this country.
As hon. Members have said, we should not forget about cats.
Heavily pregnant cats are being smuggled, and some people outside
this country mutilate cats. I am talking about declawing, which
is actually just chopping the claws off. That is illegal in this
country, but it is still legal to import cats that have been
horrifically declawed.
We have heard today about the importance of checking animals for
diseases as they cross borders. There have been increased reports
of canine brucellosis in this country. That is a zoonotic
disease—one that can be transmitted from animals to people. There
is a case of a human who has caught that from an imported dog. We
have to make sure that we do pre-import checks and screen animals
that cross borders. There are other diseases as well, such as
babesiosis, echinococcus and leishmaniasis. There are simple
things we can do, such as reinstate mandatory tick and tapeworm
treatments for companion animals coming into the country. We have
to be cognisant of the biosecurity of animals in the UK, and
cognisant of public health, because, as I say, some of these
diseases can be transmitted from animals to people. The Bill will
protect travelling animals, UK animals and people. It will
protect animals large and small.
In promoting animal welfare, we need to ensure that animals are
healthy. The Minister knows my stance on this, because I keep
pressing him hard on it. We are in the midst of an avian
influenza outbreak. The Animal and Plant Health Agency is coping
admirably in this dreadful situation, but we need to ensure that
APHA is adequately funded and staffed. Heaven forbid that
something else comes into the country, such as foot and mouth
disease, African swine fever or African horse sickness; APHA
would be really stressed, so we need to ensure that the Treasury
funds it. I sit on the EFRA Committee and was able to guest on
the Public Accounts Committee when it looked at the National
Audit Office report on the APHA site in Weybridge in Surrey. The
site needs radical refurbishment that will cost in the order of
£2.8 billion. The Government have committed around £1.2 billion,
which is a lot of money in these tight fiscal circumstances, but
I firmly believe that we need to fund it moving forward.
Larger animals should be covered by the Bill, too. Not one horse
is moved legally from the UK to Europe for slaughter, but it is
likely that thousands are moved illegally. The EFRA Committee
took harrowing evidence on illegal animal movements across
borders. It needs to stop, and this sort of legislation can
control it. We need to improve equine identification and digital
monitoring. I welcome the fact that the Bill covers the export of
livestock, and would stop the movement of farm animals for
slaughter and fattening, but we need to specify that it is all
right in certain instances to move animals around for breeding
purposes. That would be complementary to measures on the movement
of animals. We need to ensure that the legislation works.
As I said, we have high standards in this country, and should be
proud of that, but we need to work together to improve transport
conditions for animals. It is important that farm animals be
slaughtered close to where they are reared. One of the
recommendations of the EFRA Committee report was on the need to
bolster the abattoir network in this country. I attended a
roundtable last week with the Minister on the importance of
supporting the UK’s small abattoir network, so that animals can
be reared, slaughtered and bought locally, and people can eat
local and buy local. That would reduce the transport distances
for animals, which we need to do.
I am proud that the Conservative Government have a strong record
on animal welfare. We have heard about it today. The private
Member’s Bill of my hon. Friend the Member for West Dorset
() on stronger sentencing in
animal cruelty cases has been passed into law. The animal health
and welfare pathway in the new environmental land management
scheme is a new way to reward farmers and land managers with
public money for a public good. Animal health and welfare is
recognised as a public good; we should be proud of that.
The Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act, which the former Secretary of
State, my right hon. Friend the Member for Camborne and Redruth,
talked about, has become law. It is so important that we
recognise animals as fully sentient beings. We should be proud as
Conservatives that we are driving forward a lot of these changes,
but we need to hold our nerve and keep going. Let us go back to
our manifesto, much of which the Bill would enact. Animal welfare
unites us across the House, and unites us in humanity.
Introducing this legislation is the right and moral thing to do
for these wonderful sentient beings, which we have a duty of care
towards. To quote a famous sports brand, I say to the Government:
just do it.
5.59pm
(Torbay) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Hollobone.
I welcome the chance to highlight why it is vital that we get
this Bill back on the Floor of the House of Commons. I have a
long-term interest in animal welfare policy, and I was delighted
to see the Bill. Credit should be given to the leadership of my
right hon. Friend the Member for Camborne and Redruth (), who outlined some of the
challenges he overcame in introducing it. We cannot let that
great work go to waste by not bringing it back for Report and
Third Reading.
[Derek Twigg in the Chair]
We need to remember why the Bill matters. One of the reasons why
the Government were elected with a clear majority in 2019 was
that they embraced animal welfare goals. Gone was the distracting
pledge from 2017 to waste time holding a vote on repealing the
Hunting Act 2004. In its place were pledges to improve animal
welfare and tackle long-standing issues such as long journeys
abroad for fattening and slaughter.
In our manifesto, my right hon. Friend the Member for Uxbridge
and South Ruislip () built on the work of my
right hon. Friend the Member for Surrey Heath () and made it clear that
conservation and animal welfare make a successful strategy for
key industries in this country; they are not a set of alternative
ambitions. In short, a Government who rightly cite the 2019
general election manifesto as their mandate must get on and
deliver it via this Bill.
As hon. Members said, the Government can rightly point with pride
to their record on improving animal welfare legislation. The
Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022 became law in the last
parliamentary Session, and the Government are setting up the
Animal Sentience Committee to advise them on policies that affect
the welfare of animals. I agree with what my right hon. Friend
the Member for Camborne and Redruth said about EU law. I remember
looking into the matter when some of these debates were going on.
People who cite EU law as the panacea of animal welfare
regulation should consider the fact that bullfighting continued
in Spain and cockfighting continued in parts of Europe. The law
is so full of holes, that things like that can be defined as
“cultural” or “historical”. Practices that have been outlawed in
this country for decades if not centuries are lawful under
legislation that some cite as a magical cure for animal welfare
issues.
I welcomed the new powers for the police and courts to tackle the
illegal and cruel sport of hare coursing in the Police, Crime,
Sentencing and Courts Act 2022. The Ivory Act 2018 came into
force in June, ensuring protection for elephants, and the
Government backed a Bill, ably steered through Parliament by my
hon. Friend the Member for West Dorset (), to increase the maximum
penalty for animal cruelty offences from six months to five
years’ imprisonment. They also introduced penalty notices for
animal welfare offences and banned glue traps. All those measures
received Royal Assent. I am also delighted to note that the
Government support the Shark Fins Bill, which will tackle the
practice of finning, and the Hunting Trophy Import (Prohibition)
Bill. Both Bills are progressing through Parliament and will make
further progress, but now we need progress on the Animal Welfare
(Kept Animals) Bill.
There is a lot to like about the Bill. It includes measures to
crack down on low-welfare movement of pets into Great Britain,
and introduces new restrictions on pet travel and on the
commercial import of pets on welfare grounds; for example, it
increases the minimum age at which dogs can be moved for
non-commercial purposes or commercially imported into Great
Britain. It would also prohibit the importation of heavily
pregnant dogs and dogs that have been subject to low-welfare
practices, such as ear cropping and tail docking, the effects of
which were highlighted by my hon. Friend the Member for Penrith
and The Border (Dr Hudson). The Bill also proposes reducing the
number of pet dogs, cats and ferrets that can travel to Great
Britain in one non-commercial movement to five; that removes a
loophole that can be exploited by the unscrupulous.
The transport of animals can have serious negative effects on
animals’ welfare, especially over very long distances, due to a
variety of factors including distress, injury from unsuitable
transport, hunger, dehydration, and heat and cold stress. There
has been long-standing public and parliamentary concern about the
welfare issues arising from this trade. Some of us can remember
the protests back in the 1990s on these issues, including in
Plymouth near the docks. It was right to make a commitment to end
excessively long journeys for animals for slaughter was right,
and we are delivering it now that we are outside the European
Union. That shows the change that can be made. It is permitted
only because we are outside the European Union; we could not
change the law under single market rules. We now really want to
see progress. I also remind the Minister that the Government’s
consultation on the issue received more than 11,000 responses,
with 86% of respondents agreeing that livestock and equine export
journeys for slaughter and fattening were unnecessary.
Primates have been mentioned. We can all agree that primates are
not suitable pets, and the law should reflect that. I note that
the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill would introduce new
prohibitions on the keeping, breeding and sale of primates, so
that only those holding a relevant licence would be permitted to
keep and breed them, and the sale of such primates would be
permitted only if the recipient was a relevant licence holder.
That would end the ability to buy one out of curiosity, or to
keep at home as a pet. A new primate licensing regime would
ensure that people who are permitted to keep primates provide
them with high welfare conditions akin to those provided by
licensed zoos. The regime would involve regular inspections,
enforced by local authorities. That again emphasises the need to
get the Bill back to the Floor of the House. As has been touched
on, there are measures in it to deal with livestock worrying, an
issue that regularly affects rural communities across Devon. All
those aims are worthy. I also hope to see our animal welfare work
go a little further in other areas; for example, there could be a
ban on the import and sale of foie gras, the production of which
has for many years been banned in this country.
I should also mention zoos. It is welcome that the Bill would
update the Zoo Licensing Act 1981. It increases the maximum
penalties for zoos that do not comply with legislation, and would
also modernise the appeals process. We must remember that zoos do
their conservation work not just in the field; the zoo itself can
be a modern-day Noah’s ark for many endangered species. Zoos are
often a species’ last hope of avoiding extinction due to the
effects of war, hunting or habitat loss in their native
environment.
Members might be aware of my enthusiasm for the conservation work
undertaken by Paignton zoo, which is part of the Wild Planet
Trust. Its core aim is to help halt species decline. It is
important that we get assurances from the Government that there
will be a broad understanding of zoo conservation in the revised
zoo standards that might be set. They should also accurately
reflect the different ways in which zoos achieve conservation
impacts; they do so not only directly through reintroduction
programmes, but through their work to inspire and educate, and
through the resources they generate. As has been said, zoos
globally contribute more than $350 million annually to species
conservation programmes in the wild, making them the world’s
third largest funder of species conservation. UK zoos alone
contribute 10% of that global total.
Notably, a 2021 study found that in Britain and the overseas
territories, the fate of 29 native species rests in the hands of
just seven zoos and aquariums, who are members of the British and
Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums. It is vital that work
around the Bill recognises and engages with the zoo sector, so
that we not only deliver high welfare standards, but support a
sector that does so much to conserve endangered species and
inspire interest in them. I urge the Minister to commit to a
definition of zoo conservation standards that avoids being too
narrow and instead fully acknowledges the breadth of zoo
conservation activities. The Bill grants the Secretary of State
greater power to change standards, perhaps without parliamentary
scrutiny. I hope the Minister can assure us that there will be
adequate transparency, accountability and consultation with the
sector.
It is clear that the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill enjoys
wide support from Members across the House, and the lines about
the lack of parliamentary time wear thin given the number of
general and Backbench Business debates there are. I expect that
even the most enthusiastic participants in those debates would be
willing for a day to be used for such important legislation.
There are a range of measures in the Bill that I am keen to see
come into effect, plus we could take action on further points to
enhance our nation’s approach to animal welfare. The Bill has a
lot of good provisions in it that deliver our manifesto
commitments and act as a lasting testament to our dedication to
these issues. I therefore hope that we will shortly hear when we
will finally get a chance to get on and deliver on those
commitments.
6.09pm
(East Kilbride, Strathaven
and Lesmahagow) (SNP)
It is an absolute pleasure to serve under your chairmanship
today, Mr Twigg. I congratulate the hon. Member for Carshalton
and Wallington () on presenting this
extremely important debate that was considered by the Petitions
Committee. As he rightly said, e-petition 619442, relating to the
Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill, has 107,000 signatures. The
UK is a place where the prioritisation of animal welfare is to
the fore, no matter which constituency we represent. The hon.
Gentleman gave a comprehensive overview of the importance of this
Bill to his constituents and to people across the United Kingdom.
It is extremely important that we recognise the cross-party
support that has been evidenced here today. During his speech, he
took interventions from Members from different parties who spoke
positively about the need to bring forward the Bill after such a
long delay and ensure that we continue to work collaboratively to
make it happen for all our constituents across Great Britain.
We heard from the hon. Member for Ellesmere Port and Neston
(), who spoke eloquently
about his own zoo, Chester Zoo. He spoke about the importance of
the issues in the Bill and of taking the Bill forward to ensure
that zoo animals have excellent welfare conditions and the
specialist services they need.
We heard from the right hon. Member for Camborne and Redruth
(), the former Secretary of
State—I was about to put him back in post by referring to him as
the Secretary of State—who has experience in these matters. He
spoke comprehensively about the need to introduce the Bill,
saying that a lack of parliamentary time is not a persuasive
argument and that these matters must therefore be driven forward.
It was excellent to hear from him on that matter.
We heard from another cross-party colleague, the right hon.
Member for East Antrim (), who made the point that this
is pretty much a win-win situation for Government: the public are
behind the Bill; parliamentarians cross-party are behind it.
Given the current economic situation across the United Kingdom,
this could be a positive piece of legislation that would be
welcomed by all. Why, therefore, is it being delayed? We need to
hear from the Minister about the reasons but, more importantly,
we need to address them and drive this Bill forward.
We heard from the hon. Member for West Dorset (), who is an animal champion in
this House. He referred to the excellent work of Lorraine Platt,
from the Conservative Animal Welfare Foundation, who is in the
Gallery today. I consider Lorraine to be a friend—although we
have political differences, we are very much together on animal
welfare and the need to ensure that the UK continues to have the
highest animal welfare standards internationally and that we
support the important legislative progress of Bills such as the
one we are discussing.
We then heard from the hon. Member for North Devon (), who actually gave most of
the speech that I had written for myself, so I will not repeat
what she has said. She spoke comprehensively about the asks from
the Dogs Trust, the RSPCA and Blue Cross and the importance of
addressing the exclusion of cats and horses in the current Bill.
She also spoke about the importance of looking at the scourge of
puppy smuggling, which is an ongoing misery for those animals—the
puppies and their mothers—who are impacted.
We also heard from the hon. Member for Bury North (), who has been doing an amazing
amount of work on these matters. He referred to work that he has
done on Gizmo’s law and Tuk’s law, which have garnered support
across parties. The laws would ensure that microchips are
scanned, that healthy dogs are not inadvertently put down, and
that all possible measures are taken to prevent those
occurrences.
The contribution of the hon. Member for Penrith and The Border
(Dr Hudson) was impressive and helpful. He is a veterinary
surgeon and has served on the relevant Bill Committee. He spoke
from his own experience about how important the Bill is, and
about the harrowing evidence that the Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs Committee heard from the Dogs Trust: heavily pregnant
dogs are being smuggled into the country, then taken back abroad
afterwards. I worked for a long time on another piece of
legislation, Lucy’s law, which was about ensuring that puppies
were seen with their mothers. It is a scourge on our society
that, having put that legislation in place to protect puppies
from puppy smuggling, individuals are finding ways to make dogs’
lives even more harrowing, by bringing the pregnant mothers into
the country and then taking them back out.
I listened avidly to the speech of the hon. Member for Penrith
and The Border, which was truly excellent. He mentioned other
aspects of the Bill, including measures on ear cropping and
declawing. Can anyone imagine declawing a pet? What a terrible
thing to do! These animals require claws in their natural
environment and for their natural habits. From the speeches that
we have heard today, we know how urgent this issue is. I beseech
the Minister to do everything that he possibly can to take the
Bill forward. He has the full support of SNP Members, and I know
from the many contributions of colleagues across the parties that
the House will support him in ensuring that the Bill becomes
law.
Finally, we heard from the hon. Member for Torbay (). I have been on holiday to
Torbay, and did not know that he represented that constituency;
it is a fine place to represent. He has championed animal welfare
as long as I can remember since coming to the House, and I thank
him for that. He spoke about the importance of zoos and his
important work on the Ivory Bill. We have all worked together on
many of these issues, including the Ivory Bill and Lucy’s law. We
want the public to see continued progress, and we want to know
that we are doing our best in this House to ensure that the UK
has the highest animal welfare standards.
In closing, I thank those organisations that do so much and
provide us with so much support on these issues. I may have
missed some from my list, but it includes the organisations that
have contacted me and of which I am aware. There are many more in
our individual constituencies, and I thank them all, even if I do
not mention them today. I thank the RSPCA and the Scottish
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. I often visit
the SSPCA, and will visit again this year to give blankets for
pets who hope to be homed over the next few months by our local
SSPCA. I thank the Dogs Trust, with which I keep in close
contact, and those I have worked with on Reggie’s law, Tuk’s law
and Gizmo’s law. I also thank the all-party parliamentary dog
advisory welfare group, which I was very privileged to chair
until this year; I have now handed over to the hon. Member for
Canterbury (), who is taking it forward
with great gusto. I also thank Pup Aid, Marc the Vet and, of
course, Lorraine from the Conservative Animal Welfare Foundation,
whom I have already mentioned. They are all doing a tremendous
job of holding us in this House to account, and we will also hold
one another to account. We keenly await what the Minister has to
say; I cannot say often or strongly enough that he has our full
support. I want to see progress, as do many people across the
United Kingdom.
6.19pm
(Newport West) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this afternoon,
Mr Twigg. I thank the hon. Member for Carshalton and Wallington
() for moving the motion on
behalf of the Petitions Committee. It is rare to speak in such a
consensual and constructive debate. It has been a real pleasure
to listen to the knowledgeable contributions of all Members
here.
I suppose that the simple question to the Minister is: where is
the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill? I could just ask that
question and then sit down again, but, sadly, I am not going to,
because I would like to—[Interruption.] I will be brief, but I do
have a few things that need to be said.
This issue spans the whole of the UK, and I think it speaks
volumes that the top 10 constituencies by signature span Wales,
Northern Ireland and Scotland, as well as England. I would
acknowledge all of those people across the United Kingdom who
signed the petition, including those top 10 by signature—East
Londonderry, Ynys Môn, East Antrim, South Antrim, Mid Ulster,
North Antrim, South Down, Dwyfor Meirionnydd, Livingston, and
North Down.
We all know that involvement and engagement with our democratic
processes can, at times, seem difficult, so I am pleased that
many people across the UK, including almost 400 people from my
own constituency of Newport West, have signed the petition. I
thank them for ensuring that their voices have been heard, and I
hope that the Minister will go back to his Department and urge
the new Secretary of State to get on with it and start
delivering.
The benefit of such a focused debate is that there is no excuse
for rambling, dithering or delay, so I will be brief. To be
clear, Labour supports the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill,
and, indeed, we want to strengthen it. That is why we have tabled
a number of amendments for the Report stage of the Bill. More
than anything, we want the Bill back before the House and
speedily signed into law. We believe in honouring animal welfare,
and will always push for the strongest possible animal welfare
policies. Those are not just words; we mean it, and all Members
who have had the chance in the recent months and years to work
with us know that we mean what we say.
I would like to thank all the stakeholders, campaigners and
organisations who work, day in and day out, to fight for the
welfare of our natural wildlife, our animals and our pets, and
for this country to show real and meaningful leadership. Many of
those people and organisations sent helpful briefings before the
debate, and those briefings have been cited and referenced by
many colleagues this afternoon.
As the RSPCA put it in its excellent briefing, today is a chance
for the House to urge Ministers to do what they have promised, to
honour their word and to get things done. It is important that
the Bill is brought back to the House and that it is signed into
law. The Opposition support it, the people across our United
Kingdom support it, and, as we have heard today, lots of Tory
Back Benchers support it, so I urge the Minister to just get on
with it.
Labour not only supports this Bill; we want to make it stronger
and properly fit for purpose. That is why we have tabled a number
of amendments for Report. I urge Government MPs to get behind our
amendments so that, together, we can make this Bill properly fit
for purpose.
Our amendments—tabled by me, the shadow Secretary of State, my
hon. Friend the Member for Oldham West and Royton (), and my hon. Friends the
Members for Cambridge () and for Leeds North West
()—include new clause 1, which
looks at the microchipping of cats. We have talked about that at
length this afternoon. The new clause would require the Secretary
of State to make regulations on the compulsory microchipping of
cats within six months of the Bill being introduced. New clause
14 looks at the regulation of the keeping of hunting dogs and
would require the Secretary of State to make regulations for the
licensing of the keeping of one or more dogs used for the
purposes of hunting, with a view to assuring the health and
welfare of those dogs.
Amendment 1 would prohibit the keeping of primates as pets in
England—again, a simple amendment, which I hope Ministers will
accept when the Bill is brought back to the House. Amendment 2
would broaden the definition of “at large” dogs, by requiring
non-exempt dogs in fields with relevant livestock present to be
on a lead if they are to be deemed “under control”, unless
keeping the dog on a lead poses a risk of harm to the person in
charge of the dog. Our final amendment, amendment 3, would
restrict the maximum number of dogs, cats and ferrets that may
enter Great Britain in a non-commercial motor vehicle to
three.
While this is not the place to debate the merits of the specific
amendments, I wanted to give the House, colleagues present here
today, and those watching from outside, a clear picture that
Labour is on their side. We understand the importance of this
Bill and care about ensuring that our country leads by
example.
I wonder whether, in the interests of getting this Bill through,
the hon. Lady might consider not pushing some of those
amendments, since many of them are unnecessary. There are already
legislative provisions that would enable us to introduce
microchipping for cats; it does not need further legislation.
There is also a welfare code for working dogs, including hunting
dogs, which is covered by the Animal Welfare Act 2006, which the
hon. Lady’s party introduced when it was in government. That
measure is due for review, so the amendment is wholly unnecessary
and is only likely to slow down the passage of the Bill.
I thank the right hon. Member, a former Secretary of State, for
his contribution. We proposed the amendments because stakeholders
came to us to say that they wanted those things to be
strengthened. Although I appreciate that the right hon. Gentleman
has not changed his position, I hope that we can have a reasoned
debate on Report to increase understanding. We have no intention
of slowing down the Bill in any way, shape or form; we merely
want to strengthen it and make it more fit for purpose. That is
why the amendments have been tabled; it is why organisations such
as the British Veterinary Association talk about the Animal
Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill as “important legislation”, and why
the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums welcomes
its principles, but wants it to make a real impact. It is so good
to see so many visitors in the Public Gallery today, listening to
the debate; in particular, I pay tribute to Andy Hall and Vicky
from BIAZA.
Battersea Dogs and Cats Home—to which I paid a very enjoyable
visit earlier this year—has also made clear its concerns about
the delay and dithering. In its helpful briefing, written by
Helen McNally, Battersea reminds us that the Bill completed its
last parliamentary stage over a year ago in November 2021, and
although it was carried over in the Queen’s Speech, we still do
not have a set date for when it will return to Parliament. It
would be marvellous if the Minister could put us all out of our
misery by giving us the actual date this afternoon.
James West from Compassion in World Farming shared a briefing
that was very helpful and that will guide the discussions we will
be able to have when the Bill returns to the House. That briefing
sits helpfully alongside the one prepared by Blue Cross for Pets,
and I thank Richard Woodward for getting in touch ahead of the
debate. Blue Cross notes that it, alongside other animal welfare
charities, is deeply concerned at the stalled progress of the
Bill, and goes on to note that while the Bill is not perfect, it
is a start. We all remain hopeful that Ministers will meet us
halfway when the Bill returns, and will support all sensible and
objective amendments.
I am also grateful to Ferdy Willans and all those at Dogs Trust
for the work they are doing on the horror that is the puppy
smuggling trade. Since 2014, Dogs Trust has been exposing
widespread abuse of the pet travel scheme—we have heard something
of that already this afternoon. That scheme is being used by
smugglers illegally to import puppies, often under age,
unvaccinated and in poor welfare conditions, from central and
eastern Europe to be sold to unsuspecting buyers throughout the
UK. With the return of the Bill, we will be able to tackle and
end that cruel trade once and for all. I thank Jessica Terry at
World Animal Protection and Cameron Stephenson at Chester zoo for
their work and for sharing their thoughts ahead of this
afternoon’s debate. It was good to meet the Chester zoo staff
just a few days ago, and to see the important work they do. I
share the enthusiasm of my hon. Friend the Member for Ellesmere
Port and Neston () for just how important
their conservation work is.
Today is a good day. The debate has given us an opportunity to
talk about the Bill, and to remind ourselves of the benefits of
the strong, bold and ambitious piece of legislation that that
Bill can be, if we want it to be. I am grateful to those who keep
talking about the Bill, including the more than 100,000 people
who signed the petition, and I hope the Minister will answer the
following four questions: when will the Animal Welfare (Kept
Animals) Bill be brought back? How much longer do we have before
the carry-over motion that kept it going expires? What does
animal welfare post Brexit and in 2022 actually mean to
Ministers? Finally, will Ministers work with all of us who want
to make sure the Bill can deliver the strong and bold approach to
animal welfare that we all want and need to see?
I thank the hon. Member for Carshalton and Wallington for
introducing the debate, and I thank you, Mr Twigg, for chairing
it.
6.28pm
The Minister for Food, Farming and Fisheries ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Twigg, as
well as that of Mr Hollobone, who was in the Chair at the
beginning of the debate. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for
Carshalton and Wallington () for securing this
afternoon’s debate. It was also a pleasure to see my right hon.
Friend the Member for Camborne and Redruth () in his place—I think we can
describe him as the father of the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals)
Bill, and as someone who has pushed it forward and is a big
advocate of it.
To cut to the chase very quickly, I am probably going to
disappoint the Chamber today by being unable to announce the date
that Members have yet to hear from the Dispatch Box. However, I
think I will be able to reassure colleagues, who have raised a
number of matters this afternoon, that the Government take the
Bill very seriously and are very keen to get on with it. What we
have seen today is the House at its best—united and very keen to
move forward. Colleagues across the Chamber have been huge
advocates for animal welfare.
I have been asked on a number of occasions not to give stock
answers and not to justify why the Bill has not made progress so
far, but it would be remiss of me not to gently say to colleagues
that matters that were not in the manifesto have overtaken
events. There was no mention of coronavirus in the Conservative
party manifesto of 2019, because we did not know we were going to
be hit with a huge global pandemic. There was no mention of how
we would respond to Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, his
illegal war and his persecution of the people of Ukraine. We have
had to bring forward a number of matters that have put pressure
on the parliamentary calendar.
That does not mean that we cannot deliver on the things that we
have committed to. The Bill will make progress as soon as we have
parliamentary time that will allow us to move forward. The
remaining stages will be announced in the usual way. I know that
is a stock answer, but it is a commitment to move forward. For
those who look for conspiracy theories that the Bill is being
objected to or blocked in some way, I would say that it was
introduced to the House in May as a carry-over Bill. Hon. Members
may recall that the remaining stages were due to take place on 19
September. That did not happen because the funeral of Her Majesty
Queen Elizabeth II took place on the same day. The Government
tried to move forward, and we will come back to the Bill very
shortly.
The Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill is just one part of the
Government’s ambitious plans to improve animal welfare standards
at home and abroad. We have made significant progress in taking
forward the reforms set out in the action plan. We have been
overwhelmed by the support from stakeholders, for which we are
very grateful. Let us not forget all the excellent work our
farmers do to follow the highest welfare standards, showing their
dedication and commitment to caring for animals every single
day.
The Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022 became law in the last
parliamentary session, and we are in the process of setting up an
animal sentience committee to advise the Government on polices
that impact on the welfare of animals. We have introduced new
powers for the police and courts to tackle the illegal and cruel
sport of hare coursing through the Police, Crime, Sentencing and
Courts Act 2022. The Ivory Act 2018 came into force in June this
year to ensure protection for elephants.
We have backed Bills to increase the maximum penalties for animal
cruelty offences from six months to five years—I know that was
pushed by my hon. Friend the Member for West Dorset ()—to introduce penalty notices
for animal welfare offences and to ban glue traps. They all
received Royal Assent. The Government are supporting private
Member’s Bills, which include one on shark fins, as has already
been mentioned. We have announced that we will make cat
microchipping compulsory, and we are updating the dog
microchipping regulations. We are also continuing to explore
evidence and considering reforms in several other areas across
the animal welfare agenda. I am sure that hon. Members will
appreciate that the action plan is a long-term reform agenda, and
that we cannot do everything at once.
If we are going to move forward—there have been hints of this
during the debate—we are going to have to progress together and
in a way that will ensure we can deliver this important
legislation. I say gently to hon. Members and peers in the other
place that, in a packed legislative programme, parliamentary time
is severely limited. As my right hon. Friend the Member for
Camborne and Redruth hinted, it would therefore be helpful if
those considering new animal welfare reforms for inclusion in the
Bill or tabling amendments to existing clauses bore in mind the
impact on the progress of the Bill as it makes its way through
Parliament.
I do not intend to detain Members much longer. In conclusion, I
thank all those who participated in the debate. There is clearly
strong support across the House for the measures in the Bill to
reach the statute book as soon as possible. The Animal Welfare
(Kept Animals) Bill will play a small but significant part in
delivering higher standards of animal welfare to address specific
concerns relating to pets, livestock and kept wild animals. I
look forward to working with hon. Members to build on our already
high welfare standards to deliver for all animals here and
abroad.
6.35pm
It is a pleasure to have served under your chairmanship for the
end of the debate, Mr Twigg. Colleagues will be relieved to hear
that I do not intend to take until 7.30 pm to wind up.
I thank all right hon. and hon. Members for coming and showing
the incredible cross-party support for getting this important
Bill on to the statute book. Indeed, we very much heard that
passion from Members who took part in the debate, including the
hon. Member for Ellesmere Port and Neston (), the former Secretary of
State, my right hon. Friend the Member for Camborne and Redruth
()—we are grateful he came to
share his expertise with us—and my hon. Friends the Members for
West Dorset () and for Torbay (). We also heard from my hon.
Friends the Members for North Devon (), for Bury North () and for Penrith and The Border
(Dr Hudson) about how the Bill could go further, but it is clear
that we all want it to get on to the statute book. We will do
everything possible to get it there as soon as possible.
I add a plea to the Minister to take away in particular the point
about the Northern Ireland protocol and its impact on
implementing much of the Bill in Northern Ireland. I remind
colleagues that, when we talk about the transporting of animals,
we are not just talking about commercial arrangements; many
domestic animal movements have been impacted by the protocol. I
will just pick up on the example of those who keep poultry, who
are finding it very hard. Avian flu has had a real impact on the
ability to show poultry, but there has been much concern among
those living in Great Britain about being able to take their
birds to attend shows such as that run by the Ulster Poultry
Federation in Northern Ireland. I ask the Minister to ensure that
DEFRA does all it can to represent those concerns at the highest
possible level in discussion of the protocol.
In conclusion, I thank the petitioners, those in the Public
Gallery who came along today and the Petitions Committee staff
for their work in putting on the debate. Clearly, we are all very
keen to get the Bill enacted as soon as possible. My hon. Friend
for Penrith and The Border nicked a very good slogan, which I was
tempted to repeat, but as Brexit has come up a lot during the
course of the debate, I will nick another instead: let us get the
Bill done.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered e-petition 619442, relating to the
Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill.
|